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The Fannie-Freddie Fraud
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Statement
before the US House of Representatives on HR 3221 July 24, 2008
Madam Speaker,
For several
years, followers of the Austrian school of economics have warned
that unless Congress moved to end the implicit government guarantee
of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and took other steps to disengage
the US Government from the housing market, America would face a
crisis in housing. This crisis would force Congress to choose between
authorizing a taxpayer bailout of Fannie and Freddie, and other
measures increasing government’s involvement in housing, or restoring
a free-market in housing by ending government support for Fannie
and Freddie and repealing all laws that interfere in housing. The
bursting of the housing bubble, and the recent near-collapse in
investor support for Fannie and Freddie has proven my fellow Austrians
correct. Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, instead of ending
the prior interventions in the housing market that are responsible
for the current crisis, Congress is increasing the level of government
intervention in the housing market. This is the equivalent of giving
a drug addict another fix, which will only make the necessary withdrawal
more painful.
The provision
giving the Treasury Secretary a blank check to purchase Fannie and
Freddie stock not only makes the implicit government guarantee of
Fannie and Freddie explicit, it represents another unconstitutional
delegation of Congress’ Constitutional authority to control the
allocation of taxpayer dollars. While the Treasury Secretary has
to file a report with Congress, the lack of any effective standards
for the expenditure of funds makes it impossible for Congress to
perform effective oversight on Treasury’s expenditures.
HR 3221 also
takes another troubling step toward the creation of surveillance
state by creating a Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System and Registry.
This federal database will contain personal information about anyone
wishing to work as a "loan originator." "Loan originator"
is defined broadly as anyone who "takes a residential loan application;
and offers or negotiates terms of a residential mortgage loan for
compensation or gain." According to some analysts, this definition
is so broad as to cover part-time clerks and real estate agents
who receive even minimal compensation from "originators." Additionally,
this database forced on industry will be funded by fees paid to
the federal banking agencies, yet another costly burden to the American
taxpayers.
Among the information
that will be collected from loan originators for inclusion in the
federal database are fingerprints. Madam Speaker, giving the federal
government the power to force Americans who wish to work in real
estate to submit their fingerprints to a federal database opens
the door to numerous abuses of privacy and civil liberties and establishes
a dangerous precedent. Fingerprint databases and background checks
have been no deterrent to espionage and fraud among governmental
agencies, and will likewise fail to prevent fraud in the real estate
market. I am amazed to see some members who are usually outspoken
advocates of civil liberties and defenders of the Fourth Amendment
support this new threat to privacy.
Finally, HR
3221 increases the federal debt limit by $800 billion. We are told
that CBO has scored this bill at a cost of $25 billion, but this
debt limit increase belies that. The Federal Reserve has already
propped up the housing and financial markets to the tune of over
$300 billion, and this raising of the debt limit indicates that
the cost of this newest bailout will likely be even more costly.
I am dismayed that my colleagues have not learned the lessons of
the Patriot Act and Sarbanes-Oxley. Massive bills passed in knee-jerk
reaction to crisis events will always be poorly written, burdensome
and expensive to taxpayers, and destructive of liberty.
See
the Ron Paul File
July
28, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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